First off, thank you for considering contributing to Active Admin. It's people like you that make Active Admin such a great tool.
If you've noticed a bug or have a feature request, make one! It's generally best if you get confirmation of your bug or approval for your feature request this way before starting to code.
If you have a general question about activeadmin, you can post it on Stack Overflow, the issue tracker is only for bugs and feature requests.
If this is something you think you can fix, then fork Active Admin and create a branch with a descriptive name.
A good branch name would be (where issue #325 is the ticket you're working on):
git checkout -b 325-add-japanese-translations
Make sure you're using a recent ruby and have the bundler
gem installed, at
least version 1.14.3
.
You'll also need chrome installed in order to run cucumber scenarios.
Now install the development dependencies:
bundle install
Then install javascript dependencies with Yarn (requires a current version of Node.js):
bin/yarn install
JS assets are located in app/javascript/active_admin
. The config will take care of compiling a complete bundle with Rollup using the build
script and exported to app/assets/javascripts/active_admin/base.js
ready to be used by Sprockets.
To update javascript bundle run (add -w
flag for watch mode):
bin/yarn build
Now you should be able to run the entire suite using:
bin/rake
The test run will generate a sample Rails application in tmp/test_apps
to run the
tests against.
If you want to test against a Rails version different from the latest, make sure you use the correct Gemfile, for example:
export BUNDLE_GEMFILE=gemfiles/rails_61/Gemfile
Warning SCSS assets are aimed to be used indifferently with Sprockets and webpacker.
As such, make sure not to use any sass-rails directives such as asset-url
or image-url
.
At this point, you're ready to make your changes! Feel free to ask for help; everyone is a beginner at first 😸
Active Admin is meant to be used by humans, not cucumbers. So make sure to take a look at your changes in a browser.
To boot up a test Rails app:
bin/rake local server
This will automatically create a Rails app if none already exists, and store it
in the tmp/development_apps
folder.
You should now be able to open http://localhost:3000/admin in your browser. You can log in using:
User: admin@example.com Password: password
If you need to perform any other commands on the test application, just pass
them to the local
rake task. For example, to boot the rails console:
bin/rake local console
Or to migrate the database, if you create a new migration or just play around with the db:
bin/rake local db:migrate
Your patch should follow the same conventions & pass the same code quality
checks as the rest of the project. bin/rake lint
will give you feedback in
this regard. You can check & fix style issues by running each linter
individually. Run bin/rake -T lint
to see the available linters.
At this point, you should switch back to your master branch and make sure it's up to date with Active Admin's master branch:
git remote add upstream git@github.com:activeadmin/activeadmin.git
git checkout master
git pull upstream master
Then update your feature branch from your local copy of master, and push it!
git checkout 325-add-japanese-translations
git rebase master
git push --set-upstream origin 325-add-japanese-translations
Finally, go to GitHub and make a Pull Request :D
Github Actions will run our test suite against all supported Rails versions. We care about quality, so your PR won't be merged until all tests pass. It's unlikely, but it's possible that your changes pass tests in one Rails version but fail in another. In that case, you'll have to setup your development environment (as explained in step 3) to use the problematic Rails version, and investigate what's going on!
If a maintainer asks you to "rebase" your PR, they're saying that a lot of code has changed, and that you need to update your branch so it's easier to merge.
To learn more about rebasing in Git, there are a lot of good resources but here's the suggested workflow:
git checkout 325-add-japanese-translations
git pull --rebase upstream master
git push --force-with-lease 325-add-japanese-translations
A PR can only be merged into master by a maintainer if:
- It is passing CI.
- It has been approved by at least two maintainers. If it was a maintainer who opened the PR, only one extra approval is needed.
- It has no requested changes.
- It is up to date with current master.
Any maintainer is allowed to merge a PR if all of these conditions are met.
Maintainers need to do the following to push out a release:
- Switch to the master branch and make sure it's up to date.
- Make sure you have chandler properly configured. Chandler is used to automatically submit github release notes from the changelog right after pushing the gem to rubygems.
- Run one of
bin/rake release:prepare_{prerelease,prepatch,patch,preminor,minor,premajor,major}
, push the result and create a PR. - Review and merge the PR. The generated changelog in the PR should include all user visible changes you intend to ship.
- Run
bin/rake release
from the target branch once the PR is merged.